The Evidential Support Relation In Epistemology

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LAST REVIEWED: 08 October 2015

LAST MODIFIED: 19 December 2012

DOI: 10.1093/obo/9780195396577-0189

Introduction

Just when does a person’s evidence support a proposition? This question is at the heart of influential evidentialist views in epistemology, which suggest that at least some epistemically valuable properties are determined by the relationship between the object of the agent’s attitudes and her evidence. When the agent adopts an attitude of belief toward some proposition, evidentialists will say that some epistemically valuable property attaches to that belief just in case the proposition believed is supported by the agent’s evidence and her belief is properly based on this evidence. A question similar to the one asked above, concerning when evidence confirms a theory, has been discussed in the philosophy of science literature, but it is not immediately obvious that the notion of evidential support at work in epistemology is the same as that at work in the philosophy of science. The focus of this bibliography is on debates concerning the nature of the evidential support relation as it appears in epistemology, with a special focus on its appearance in evidentialist views. Among the works surveyed are those devoted to the roles the evidential support relation may play in epistemology (in both evidentialist and nonevidentialist theories), those concerning the relata of the relation, those concerning the structure of the relation, and those bearing on the analysis or partial analysis of the relation. Where appropriate, as in the section Probabilistic Accounts of Evidential Support, literature from the philosophy of science concerning the evidential support or confirmation of theories will be surveyed as well.

Reference Works

General overviews, textbooks, and reference works on the topic of evidential support in epistemology are lacking. This is in part because discussion of the topic is at a nascent stage. However, there are some reference works dedicated to closely related areas which can help acquaint the reader with the topic and which highlight its importance. Among these are works dedicated to the viability of evidentialist views in epistemology, works dedicated to the nature of evidence, and works dedicated to the role of evidence in theory confirmation. In the former category are Plantinga 1998, Feldman 1992, and Mittag 2004; in the second category are Kelley 2006 and DiFate 2007; and in the final category are Hawthorne 2011 and Kuipers 1998.

DiFate, Victor. “Evidence.” In Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Edited by James Fieser and Bradley Dowden. 2007.

Discusses evidentialism and evidential support in the context of religious epistemology. Offers an argument-based characterization of evidentialism and a probabilistic account of support (following Locke). Available online by subscription.

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